A Review of The Bone Door by Frances White
This title was originally published on May 12, 2026 by Hanover Square Press.
*SPOILER ALERT* This review contains plot details of The Bone Door.
Labyrinths and mazes have long inspired the minds of creatives, filling our heads with stories of transformation and mystery. They are the perfect setting for a story of self-discovery, but a good setting cannot carry an entire novel. The Bone Door is Frances White’s sophomore effort following her bestselling debut, Voyage of the Damned. Marketed as a dark fantasy about overcoming trauma and the journey to redemption, The Bone Door struggles to portray its main message in a believable way.
I’m still at a loss on what to think about The Bone Door. I desperately wanted to love this book, as it was one of my most anticipated reads of the year. Voyage of the Damned had me hooked for the first three-fourths before taking a hard turn into “not for me” territory. So, I was cheering for White to stick the landing this time! But The Bone Door drastically falls short in the places Voyage of The Damned succeeded and, in an interesting change from her debut, had me struggling through the first three-fourths before speeding through the end.
It starts with a young boy waking up in a mysterious forest with no name, no memory, and no idea where he is. Quickly after, we’re introduced to two more nameless children. Together they name themselves: Amber, Little, and Hop, our protagonist. The group continues to grow as more amnesiac children are discovered and form a motley crew determined to figure out where they are and how they got there. The children eventually meet the guardian of the domain, an owl named Dolores, who informs them they are trapped in a labyrinth created by her mysterious and unnamed master. The only way to return to their former lives, which they know nothing about, is to travel through four rooms of the labyrinth, each containing a unique challenge, before arriving at the titular bone door. Sounds like a fun and gritty adventure, because who doesn’t love an evil maze?
Where this book shines is the setting. White pushes the boundaries of what can be considered a labyrinth by introducing a series of interconnected rooms where each space is a snapshot of time itself. This was a fascinating way to worldbuild and slowly reveal the mystery of the children’s true identities—reincarnations of god-like beings who have tormented the living world, cast away by the mortals who wish to be free of them. We begin the story in a room representing the time before gods, days of monsters and hooded figures engaging in sacrifice and rituals as they pray for something to save them. As the characters complete the first task, by acquiring an egg from a dragon, prayers are answered and the gods arrive. As the story progresses and we follow our protagonists through each room we’re shown the aftermath of the gods arrival, a time of worship but not stability. Gods are fickly things, and by the next room humanity has taken power back into their own hands, imprisoning the god folk in their church. Each room slowly unravels the history of this fantastical world. I commend White for her efforts with this ambitious setting. I can honestly say I’ve never read anything like it.
Despite its in-depth world building and intriguing setting, The Bone Door falls short when it comes to exploring its themes in a thoughtful way.
The Bone Door promotes itself as an exploration of healing from and facing trauma. The two characters who best exemplify Whites approach to this theme are Hop and Thistle. A survivor of repeated sexual assault, Thistle is extremely articulate about his trauma and relatively well adjusted. Sure, he’s got anger issues and pushes people away, but these are reasonable reactions to what happened to him. The way he contextualizes his experiences helps him understand he isn’t to blame, a very important step in his healing process. He knows exactly what he needs from others and tells Hop he wants someone to stand beside him without trying to fix him. On the flip side, Hop spends 90% of the book promoting compartmentalization as the best technique for handling trauma. Despite his close relationship with Thistle and intimately seeing how confronting his past has given him power, Hop holds out until the bitter end before he confronts his trauma. His friends are dying around him and opening the metaphorical box inside of him is a last-ditch effort to save the world.
Did I mention Hop and Thistle are eleven? In everyday life, this is not a realistic expectation for trauma recovery, even with adults. Healing goes on forever; yet both characters are portrayed as having one big moment of recognition and then being fine for the most part. Not to mention being forced to face your trauma, while actively in a traumatic experience, is in itself traumatic. While this is a fantasy novel and readers are encouraged to suspend their belief to buy into the world, I find it odd White would choose not to portray healing with more realistic expectations. Afterall, the main theme is redemption and recovery, it seems a disservice not to explore this topic with nuance.
One aspect I enjoyed of Voyage of the Damned is how expertly White handled a large cast. Even a character present in only two chapters felt three dimensional, relatable, and had specific connections to surviving characters. Sadly, the same couldn’t be said for The Bone Door. I couldn’t tell you more than one thing about most of the cast. Sunny likes knives, Amber is sarcastic, and Bear has anxiety. Little is arguably one of the most important characters in the story and her entire personality revolves around chasing shiny objects until her memory returns.
This is unfortunate since another central theme of the book is the notion that nothing is truly entirely evil and nothing is entirely good. Despite each character representing a duality—one personifying fire and water, another the incarnation of death and life—they are inherently one dimensional and rarely learn from their mistakes. Storm, the personification of weather and earth, is a raging ball of energy, constantly causing problems for herself and others and never backing down. The side of her that represents air is prominent, but she lacks a nurturing side or ability to grow that would clue us in to her other element.
The Bone Door declares its themes in a loud voice with little to back up, but pulls off a satisfying mystery if you make it to the end. I can’t wait to see Frances White blend together the best of her two books. When she does, I’m sure she’ll produce a force to be reckoned with.